Monday, April 27, 2015

Homework

Read "The Duchess and the Jeweller" by Virginia Woolf. It can be found in our class folder.

Thursday, April 23, 2015

T.S. Eliot

On Monday, April 27th, you will take a quiz on the 3 T.S. Eliot poems we read in the textbook: "Preludes," "The Hollow Men," and "The Naming of Cats."

In addition, a test grade will be given on the packet of questions pertaining to "The Lovesong of J. Alfred Prufrock" that will be due on Monday. Check out this video!

Thursday, April 16, 2015

April 15, 2015 The Daily Show Satirical Journal Entry

Explain what is being satirized and how humor helps in understanding the more serious topics. (The Video Can be Found Here.)

On the News Media and News Coverage:

  • The urgency to cover insignificant news.
  • The methods in which serious, graphic, news is covered.
  • The use of language censor versus graphic censor
Questions to Discuss "The Future of Christianity" Segment

  • Do you agree/disagree with either one of the people interviewed regarding the future of faith?
  • Can AI (Artificial Intelligence), once it becomes aware of itself,  convert to a faith?

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

April 14, 2015 The Daily Show Satirical Journal Entry.

Explain what is being satirized and how humor helps in understanding the more serious topics. (The episode can be found here.)


  • Constitutional authority regarding making treaties and declaring war.
  • News coverage of Marco Rubio's announcement as a candidate for president versus Hilary Clinton's lunch.
Interview with Fareed Zakaria and his new book In Defense of a Liberal Education.

  • Do you think our educational system needs to be changed? If so, why?
  • Is the MOOC (Massive Open Online Course) a better alternative to 'traditional' classroom education?

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

April 13, 2015 The Daily Show Satirical Journal Entry.

Explain what is being satirized and how humor helps in understanding the more serious topics. (The Episode Can be Found Here)
  • Hilary Clinton’s announcement for her candidacy for president and the response from political opponents.

  • The NRA spokesman’s comment on 8 years of a “demographically” chosen president and the accompanied skit.


  • The Interview with the Mid East correspondent.

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Quiz Questions Due Tomrrow

Below are a list of 10 quiz questions. Please choose 2 from each of the Acts and answer them. The answers need to be complete and concise (paragraph length or more.) They will be due tomorrow.

Act One

1. Why does Jack Worthing call himself "Ernest" instead when he is in "town"
(London)?

2. How does Wilde satirize the attitudes and lifestyles of the British
aristocracy in Lady Bracknell's interview with Jack?

3. What is the essence of such Wildean aphorisms as the following?" "[Women
flirting with their own husbands] looks so bad. It is simply washing one's clean
linen in public."

4. What point is Wilde making about journalism in general and reviewers in
particular when Algernon remarks, "You should leave that [literary criticism] to
people who haven't been at University. They do it so well in the daily papers"?

5. What tools of satire –irony, juxtaposition, understatement, paradox –are
apparent in this opening act? CITE SPECIFIC LINES FROM THE PLAY.

Act Two

1. "Gwendolen and Cecily are not so much opposites as complements." Explain
this remark by reference to their speeches and actions.

2. Early on in Act One Jack Worthing articulates the difference between city life
and country life. Show three ways in which the life of the country (as
exemplified by the Manor House, Woolton, Herfordshire) is very different from
the bachelor life of The Albany, London.

3. Like Jack, Algy leads a double life, utilizing an escape mechanism when
necessary to free himself of a life of social obligation and lead a life of
unrestrained pleasure. Explain their differing motivations, but how both are
"confirmed Bunburyists," nevertheless.

4. The comedy of mistaken identity is a very old dramatic form – as old, in fact,
as comedy itself – which Wilde manages to revitalize in The Importance of Being
Earnest. The key mistaken identity in this play, of course, is that of “Ernest”
himself. What comic consequences result from Algernon’s assuming the role of
Ernest Worthing?

5. What role does food have within the play? (Notice how Jack and Algy are
eating muffins at key points – and then those pesky cucumber sandwiches in
Act I…)